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WSJ report on 787 delay woes

The Wall Street Journal has a detailed and very readable story that goes behind the scenes of the 787 woes.

Boeing will give media and analysts an update on the program Tuesday.

“From where we stand, it’s still chaos,” an executive at one major supplier told the paper.

When the Chicago aerospace giant set out four years ago to build the fuel-sipping jet, it figured the chief risk lay in perfecting a process to build much of the plane from carbon-fiber plastic instead of aluminum. Boeing focused so hard on getting the science right that it didn’t grasp the significance of another big change: The 787 is the first jet in Boeing’s 91-year history designed largely by other companies.

The supplier problems ranged from language barriers to snafus that erupted when some contractors themselves outsourced chunks of work. An Italian company struggled for months to gain approval to build a fuselage factory on the site of an ancient olive grove. The first Dreamliner to show up at Boeing’s factory was missing tens of thousands of parts, Boeing said.

“In addition to oversight, you need insight into what’s actually going on in those factories,” says Scott Carson, the president of Boeing’s Commercial Airplanes unit. “Had we had adequate insight, we could have helped our suppliers understand the challenges.”

Note: This is a seattlepi.com reader blog. It is not written or edited by the P-I. The authors are solely responsible for content. E-mail us at newmedia@seattlepi.com if you consider a post inappropriate.